A New History of the Picts by Stuart McHardy

"A New History of the Picts" by Stuart McHardy sets out to shed new
light on the story of the Picts. The Picts are usually portrayed as residing in
one of the most mysterious corners of the early history of what is now known as
Scotland: arriving and departing in uncertain circumstances and leaving little
but a marvellous collection of carved stones to show they were ever here at
all.

McHardy's thesis is a radical one, yet at the same time a very
straightforward one. For him the Picts were the descendents of the indigenous
peoples who occupied most of Scotland north of the Clyde-Forth line (apart from
much of Argyll). The people who carved the Pictish symbol stones were simply
the descendents of the people who had built the iron age brochs, who in turn
were descendents of those who left their mark on the landscape in the bronze
age and neolithic eras.

At the other end of the chronology he argues that the Picts were not
somehow displaced or defeated by the Scots of what is now Argyll. Rather he
believes that the Picts and Scots had an increasingly close coexistence over
the centuries, to the point where they shared generations of kings to jointly
form a nation that became known as "Alba". On this reading, the Picts are
usually assumed to have disappeared simply because the English later chose to
translate Alba as "Scotland", and so its inhabitants became known as "Scots".
McHardy argues that it is possible to trace a continuity of tribal society from
prehistory through the Picts and the Scots to the way of life of the highland
clans which was only finally extinguished in the aftermath of the
Battle of Culloden in
1746.

Anyone seeking to tell the early story of Scotland suffers from a
series of problems. Primary references are few and very far between, and most
were written centuries later and/or in England and Ireland. The source material
has been trawled through time and again, and differences of interpretation tend
to depend on fine difference of the reading of the primary sources, or
differences in the degree to which an individual author is prepared to take
folklore or common sense into account in painting his or her picture. At times
Stuart McHardy appears to be working some of the well known references quite
hard: but the story he tells is compelling one which gets over "the problem of
the Picts" in a very satisfying way that builds the people who carved the
Pictish symbol stones back into the mainstream of our ancestry.